By the end of Monday, Kenya’s birth registry would have recorded about 3,154 newborns.

However, none of these infants will receive an oral polio vaccine as the shortage for this and two other vital boosters enters the second month.

This comes even as the government prepares for a four-day polio vaccination campaign targeting 2.6 million children under the age of five in Mombasa, Tana River, Lamu, Kilifi, Marsabit, Isiolo, Turkana, Nairobi, Wajir, Garissa and Mandera.

Meanwhile, private hospitals have been making big bucks as Kenyans pay Sh8,000 to Sh20,000 to have their children vaccinated.

Based on the Kenya Expanded Programme on Immunisation (Kepi), the polio vaccine is given through the mouth in three doses and an injection at three and a half months.

“I took my son to hospital and he received all the other vaccines except polio. The doctor gave me the option going with him unvaccinated or paying Sh8,000 for the injection,” a distraught parent told the Nation.

The shortage has seen private hospitals provide baby friendly vaccines at an extra cost as parents are left without a choice.

Private hospitals stock government issued vaccines and baby friendly versions of the dose.

Baby friendly vaccines usually address pain and the general discomfort children experience whenever they are vaccinated.

On April 6, 2018, Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri) scientists found live polio viruses in sewage samples from Eastleigh estate, Nairobi.

Health workers who spoke to the Nation yesterday said public hospitals have been experiencing a shortage of measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) and tetanus toxoid vaccines.

As a result, women with babies are usually turned away and requested to keep checking if the vaccines are available.

The shortages have been experienced since March, compelling doctors to exhaust all the doses in stock.

DEATH

The grim situation exposes the lives of millions of children to life-threatening conditions or even death.

“We receive very few doses whenever we place orders. Last week, for example, we dispatched a small package of 400 doses of the oral polio vaccine to two sub-counties in Makueni. These doses cannot last a week,” a senior nurse at one of the sub-counties’ division of vaccines and immunisation told the Nation.

As a result of the shortage, only Level Five hospitals are getting the vaccines.

This is despite the Health Ministry saying it has put in place necessary measures to ensure the availability of the vaccines in all parts of the country.

In a statement issued last week, Health Cabinet Secretary Sicily Kariuki said there is enough supply of the vaccines in Kenya to last for two months.

IMMUNISATION

Efforts to reach concerned government officials were fruitless as our calls went unanswered.